Cookies

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click accept my preferences we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on our website. Visit our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy for more information about managing your cookies.

Sign In

Confirm

People with learning disabilities worry about care funding and benefits

News, 05 November 2012

People with learning disabilities are worried about the levels of funding for care, what is going to happen to their benefits and how their support will be affected as a result, a new report has revealed.

Free care for disabled people, as well as better access to support for those with mild and moderate needs and those with multiple disabilities were also identified as crucial in the findings of Our Future, produced by disability charity United Response.

Our Future looks at Government plans published in the recent White Paper and Draft Care and Support Bill from the perspective of United Response’s Campaigns Panel, a group of service users with learning disabilities and their relatives, surveyed and interviewed by the charity.

The report reveals that while service users and their relatives feel that some of the proposed reforms would make a positive difference, almost all are concerned about current levels of funding for care, what is going to happen to their benefits, and how their support will be affected as a result.

Currently, the Government is considering the responses it received during the public consultation on its proposals.

Speaking about free care, Shairaz, a member of the Campaigns Panel, said: “Some people will need support for the rest of their lives and you can't expect them to pay for it. Disabled people shouldn't have to pay for it. We have to accept our disability and the Government has to accept it too.”

He also felt that many people have unseen needs, which are not being met. “I think that people with learning disabilities and mental health needs don’t get enough support. You need to look beyond physical appearances. People can be like apples or eggs – they look fine on the surface, but you don’t know what’s going on underneath.”

For Vicky, another member of the panel, access to care for those with mild and moderate needs is a matter of equality. “It is important to talk to people with mild and moderate needs and their relatives to ask what they think and what the person with a disability needs. This would also help more people to understand them better and to be treated equally.”

Our Future also looks at whether disabled people and their families are being kept informed of changes that could affect them and the care they receive. With only one third of the panel being able to name in detail any of the proposals, the report highlights the on-going need for information to be made more accessible.

The report calls on all politicians to make a commitment to social care and disabled people by:• Ensuring that there is enough funding to make care and support work• Listening to the views of disabled people and involving them in future decisions.

United Response’s chief executive, Su Sayer, said: “The social care system in this country is in urgent need of reform. At the moment too many disabled people are not receiving the support they need and even those that are remain concerned that their support could be reduced.

“The White Paper and draft legislation present us with an opportunity to offer disabled people a much more secure future, but this can only happen if the system is properly funded and people with disabilities are fully involved in the process.

“Disabled people deserve to have the care and support that they need and which works. We must not let them or future generations down by missing this opportunity to fix a system which is severely overstretched.”